Newspapers / The Concord Daily Tribune … / May 25, 1925, edition 1 / Page 7
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Monday, May 25, 1925 . CROSSWORD PUZZLE so p* ”s^n — —-p—— ■— g ~n~ r zuj HORIZONTAL. 1 To free from filth. 7 Landing stages or wharves (unkeyed letter is h.). 13 Place of public contest. 14 To scorch. (5 Kiln to dry hops. 17 Mistake. 19 Long slippery fiyh (pi.). 21 To employ. 22 College councils. 24 Adverbial negative. 25 Seventh musical note. 26 Something to gossip to. 27 To apply one's self. 2d Point of compass. 30 Proclamation. 32 Modern enthusiasm. 34 To fluctuate. 36 Slight depression. 37 To warble. 39 Sailors. 40 A blow on the nose. 41 Homes of birds. 42 Pace. 44 To make reparation. 46 Not as much. 49 A very gay foreign city. 51 Sneaky. 52 An amber-like substance. 53 Pal of either. 54 To assist. 56 Fish pole. 57 Toward. 58 Anger. 60 Practice of religious controversy. 63 Constellation. 64 Instrument similar to harp. . 06 Ciphers. 67 A small bunch of straw. 68 Violent seizures. 70 Treadle. 72 Far away. 73 Made a noise as high spirited horses do. 1 1 ... j - -1 TEXT OF ADDRESSES (fontifined from Page Five) llulwiukle, secretary and Mrs. J. A. Ken nett, treasurer. Music I)e]>artment: Mrs. C. F. Ritebie, chairman: Mrs. C. Is. Wagoner, vice chairman ; Miss Laura Gillon,, secretary, and Mrs. Ernest Hicks, treasurer; Mrs. J. K. Patterson publicity. American Home Department: Miss Elizabeth Smith, Miss Ruth Crowell and Mrs. IV. H. Gorman. Welfare Department: Mrs. Laura Les lie Ross, chairman, and Miss Rosa Mund, citizenship. • And now I close with the quotation from the collect of club women of Amer ica : “Let us be large in thought, in word, in deed. Let us be Uorie with fault finding and self seeking. May we never be hasty in judgment, and always gener _ oils. “Let ns take time for all things; make ns grow calm, serene and gentle. Grant) that we may realize it is little things —— Mown pop by taylo& V. CAN 1 L Think x'Yl IJ'S a shaMe t hmb tc> SoTmcr J_j\ ( u CAM SPARC, S iHf V6O 'TRtS VJto MR.QONN 80T I • KSSWSOUJ.SE MOB® TKAS -1 i' 1> X OUST 3A WUAIN6 To SSLC «E OUT J mm Jc-uj* 1 ■■ VERTICAL 1 Struck (slang). 2 To relieve. 8 Skill. 4 Point of compass. 5 To jeer. 6 To merit. 7 To discolor or stain. 8 Weights of containers. 9 Measure* of area. 10 What Eskimo homes are made of.) 11 At that time. 12 Females of the same parentage. 16 Apart. 18 yalued. 20 The unhappy party at a card game. 22 Seated. 23 To hem. 26 Morbid displacement of the heart. 28 Gossiped. 31 Interior. 32 Harbors. 33 A cent. 35 Flower containers. 37 Fanciful way of saying yes. 38 Sheltered. | 42 What's wrong with other folks’ children. 43f To loiter. 45 Greater age. 47 Local positions. 48 Pried (in others’ affairs). 50 To drink delicately. 52 Legendary bird. 55 Twelve, j 56 Got up. !an Sins. 61 For fear that. v 62 Implements for washing floors. 63 Rythmical swing. 65 To supply your stomach with work. 67 Fight among nations. 69 The family bread winner. 71 To accomplish. .1 .... that create differences; that in the big things we arc as one.’’ The following is.the text of Mrs. Gor man's address delivered by Mrs. W. H. Gorman at the meeting of the Woman's Club Friday afternoon: I was present at the 23rd annual con vention of the North Carolina Conven tion of Woinau’s Clubs. A welcome from the sand h:Hs was given by Mr. Robert N. Page, brother of the late Wa-1 ter Page, who was ambassador to Great , Rritnin during the war. Mrs. It. IV. Al len. of Wadesboro. welcomed the dele gates. and Mrs. ('has. Whittaker, chair man of the convention program commit tee, brought greetings from the Southern Pines Woman's ,Civic Club. Two new names were decided upon for Federation Departments. The civic and economic department will be named the Department of the American Home. Mrs. Jermau, in her address, said, "Vfe cannot separate politics from our moral ) standards. Women may now do more than pass resolutions. We have a vital force, the ballot which should be need lb filf ti itnportent rol* in our club work.’’ Mrs. Jerman recommended that the federation eatabliah State headquar ters with a full, or part time executive aecHtSry, to handle tne growing business of the organization, of its 50,000 mem bers. Redistricting the Skate into s’xteen divisions instead of the old 14. Cabar rus will be in the sth district which in cludes Mecklenburg. Union, Anson, Stan ly and Montgomery. Thirty-five new clubS wfre accepted into the federation this year, with 875 members. Amounts , to SI3OO wer > pledged to the Sally South all Gotten Loan fund. The Concord club | gave $lO, through its representative. This fund has helped fourteen girls. \ Worth while, don’t you think? Treasurer’s report from Mrs, Connor, of Chapel Hill, showed $6,000 bank as sets. and the completion of the $10,009 endowment, fund. Next year's proposed budget was offered with two recommen dations : To increase the expense account of district presidents, and make a gift of $250 to the maintenance fund of the general federation in compliment to Mrs. Jerman. Mrs. Ida Clarke, associate editor of the Pictorial Review, said in her speech, “The work of the world is a job for meu and women.’’ The biggest work on earth is that of being exemplary women and attending to homes and the world needs our interest and our work. The women of today who decline to take part in public affairs is a slacker. The press of today needs the help of women. The space devoted to crime and accidents should be left out when higher things are crying for pub licity. Women should enter more often the newspaper field, and lend their hu manizing .power and their constructive ideals to expression of them in the news papers. Dr. Louise Stanley, chief of the l'. S. bureau of home economics, said diet Was an important factor in home life, the thin ■ husband and the fat both proved that diet had not been carefully selected for him. Perhnps she meant the thin man should have the fat man’s meal and vice versa. Mrs. Jane McKimmon opopsed the pan try from the delicatessen store, though she said “my work is canning, but ohc is home product.’’ The selection of fur -1 niture and colors in rooms were discuss ed, everything tending itself to harmon ious effects which re-acts upon the nerves and disposition tis those who live in sur roundings they create. I verily believe with the ideas advanced by interested club women, homes would •be so lovely ohe would never want to leave. Newspapers so readable, gardens so beautiful, that birds would lodge in the branches of the trees and the Para dise we lost would seem to live again be cause we recognize that everything is good and all things are ours for the ask ing. The Florence M. Cooper eup and the Duncan cup were won by a woman who is a member of the Concord Woman's Club. Mrs. Wagoner, we are all very proud of you, and you who bear the ban ner with the strange device. "Excelsior, we ,‘jphlto.” Ahd under this banner we follow you to higher ideals and thank yon for the worfhj' example. ROCK HILL POLICE RAID . FASHIONABLE TEA SHOP Seventeen Gallons of Contraband Taken nfid Proprietress Placed Under Ar rest. Rock Hill, S. C.,. May 22.- (’barged with violating the prohibition Jaws fol lowing s. raid upoh rife ReJ Wing Tea Shop, locatpd 'on Sumpter avenue, a scant hundred feet from Oakland ave ■une, tht> choicest residential section Os the city, directly opposite Winthrop college, Mt-s Marie Sullivan, propriet ress, was talced id charge by officers here yesterday afternoon. U|>on infor mation furnished by her, P. It. Bratton was arrested and) charged with having whiskey in his possession. The raid netted 17 gallons. The two were placed under SSOO bond to state court and $10i) to city court. They for feited the stO(t) bond this morning by failure to appear in recorder’s court. Police reOSked to comment upon in formation whjeh led to the raid rather than that they had kept the shop under surveillance for some time. THE CONCORD DAILY TRIBUNE SWar®2f/^ »■ Bt CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer > WASHINGTON Between * the lines of all the obituaries „ *< published by the Washing ton newspapers a few days ago following the death of Allan E. Walker, prominent real estate man and builder of the capital, runs a story quite distinct from that of the career ’ the various articles' . authors thought they were confin ing themselves exclusively to. I It is the story of the merciless exploitation of Washington's ten ant class since the year of Amer ica’s entry fnto the war. - L Allan E. Walker died at the age pf 46. His father, the late Redford W, Walker, was a real estate man before him. The son entered the business when he was 19. h He combined apartment house promotion with his trade in city lots. At the end of 19 more years he was rated at about 150,000 and Jt was considered fie Mad done un usually well, his business ranking perhaps second anhong all of its kind in the capital. I fhdt drag the year of America* declaration of hostilities against the central powers—l9l7. “Il was fibbut tH* year 1917." one obituary quotes a friend of the late real es tate man as saying, ' that his bus iness began to grow by leaps and bounds.'’ He left an estate esti mated at $4,000,000 and it would have bisen $1,000,000 more but for a single quite recent unlucky speculation. . it* * t For 19 years Walker Saved money at the rate of about $2600 annually. During the last eight years he accumulated it at the rate of $625,000 a year. He saw his aSCace and took it. No blame at ■ OUT OUR WAY BY WILLIAMS 1$ ll'" (1 U ' //>-•" IJ ' ’" 11 111 i ■' » “ moothTN _ 111 f mow, look VIwLJLj akjo get That hump off '/our \ smvw FfISHTt ABotfrM'_JL_/CJ BACK! STbP THFiritMiNG to -——- [ \J4ERE PtiA&y j T^jQ H CHARISS! AND r TDaT hand down tu-A! nAnT A PtCfuRE OF NOO j , j. r vowv MO&tERS GET EVERETT TRUE WtONUU -—But" /\FTeR DstviNs into twclTrl 'I •ANT6~.C<SO®NTS X-B(£thovj«HT M® X— x>ix> L KeeU-S want such ,an on® ? — ll ,l. ■■■ 2ld ;!■ . Finals ttt Peace Institute. Raleigh, N. C., May 23—Tile fifty second annual comincncntieiil exercises of Peace lustitute will begin with the baeca tsureate sonndn by (he Rev. A. t). P. Oilindur. pastor of the First Presbyterian ChurcJ* of \Vilm ; ngtoii. on Sunday, Mat 31.; ; Tlie* cdiicliftling » event' Will be ah address Mrs.'.lam; Simpson McKitrt mon. ill the school chapel, -on the evening of June 2Hd. The annual play "The Ro mances," win be given on Saturday eve ning, May 30, in the chapel. A feature of the eoimneneeinent exer cises this year pill be the formal ojierf ing of Tbe Junies Druwiddie Meniorail Chapel,. named »> honor of the late Dp, Jarhes Dinw’ddie, W-ho for d number of taches to him," as an Individual. But Washington tenants footed the bill and the bill of many an other real estate man in these last eight years. • • • • • AN attache -*>f one of the Latin American legations here, a small, dark man, with keen, black eyes, a raven mustache and a high-bridged,. Oriental-looking nose, told me this story: Visiting New York recently, he had occa sion to travel by the "L," so as cended to a station platform and was waiting, inoffensively, for his train-, when he was sat on by a gang of young hoodlums of the type common •to Manhattan's Lower East Side. •>'<'. ;i Roughly and intentionally hustled and bustled, he lost his temper. “Queer eet!” he exclaimed. “I weel ’ave you arrest.” Some thing in his accent caught one of the young ruffian's attention.; “What are you." he asked sharply. 1 “Un Central Americano," rejoined the diplomat. "Hey, fellers!” cried the youth, springing into ‘action with the horrified expression of a participant in a lynching bee who suddenly discovers the Wrong man is, being strung up. “Lay off! Lay off! He ain't a kike.” * » • SENATOR and Mrs.' Burton' K. Wheeler have decided on Mar- 1 ion Montana as the first And second names of their jtew . tittle J girl. Marion is for Senator Rob-) ert Marion La Follette. Montana; is for the Wheelers' hbme state. 1 Both the.senator and his wife ha*e been deluged with telegrams froth there ever since their daughter*! birth, urging them to call her after It. =r-"' - .■■■> I, tr vi- - r _ years was the president of Peace In stitute. I The annua) alumnae meeting will be held at 11 o'clock on the morning of I June 2nd, followed by a luttchebn. In I attendance upon these fwb events will be I members of the Aluninae Association j from! uij parts of North Carolina and I from. ucighborilig States. Class'Day exercises will be held on the I campus, on the afternoon.of Jutm 1, at 5 I o'clo<-k, followed b.v tlie annual concert I and art exhibit at 8 o'clock that evening, j The vote of Mrs. Rena Elrod, unem- 1 bras of the Illinois legislature, has help- j ed to {lass a bill to legalize and regulate i 1 boxing in that state. oo<x>oo<xxx»ojooooooooooooooqoopoooooooooooooooooooooo New Fiber Suites of Unusual Beauty | i You will surely want one of these Charming Fiber Suites for your 8 | living room, sun parlor or some other room in your home. We also 8 have a large assortment of odd pieces for that fillin-piece. J Three-piece Suites, Spring Cushions, for $72.50 up. * We suggest that you call now, while our showing is most complete. ‘ i H. B. Wilkinson | OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT a Concord, Kannapolis Mooresville, China Grove S ANNOUNCEMENT j We Have Been Appointed Dealers for the KELVI NATOR Electric Refrigerator On Demonstration Every Day in Our j Store r It’s Something You Surely Nleed Yorke & Wadsworth Co. j j Union and Church Street Phone 30 Phone 30 | SPEED AND ENDURANCE In motoring depend in great measure upon the service rendered by your battery. If you want to get maximum speed and power buy batteries that gwill produce maximum power. Such is the battery we recommend and sell. AUTO SUPPLY & REPAIR CO.. Inc. PREST-O-LITE SERVICE STATION STUDE6AKEF SALES AND SERVICE PHONE 228 j GASH FEED STORE | j i Will insure the life of yoiur baby chicks when you use Star- ! j! b tina and Baby Chick Chow for yOur chicks. And if you feed | j! according to directions you can grow a two pound chick 1 1 1 in eight weeks. All we ask is a Fair Trial. j; p a^S ° ave Choice Timothy Hay, Oats and Sweet ! | Pfasne tiz s. CtraMh St. 1 STRAW HATS Your Straw is ready. The Cor rect Shape is here, with plain bands or nobby stripes. Hot days are coming, so come in I and make your selection. P RICHMOND - FLOWS CO. PAGE SEVEN
The Concord Daily Tribune (Concord, N.C.)
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May 25, 1925, edition 1
7
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